Pedro I's death from tuberculosis in 1834 …

Years: 1840 - 1851

Pedro I's death from tuberculosis in 1834 had sapped the restorationist impulse and removed the glue that held uneasy political allies together.

With the regency attempting to suppress simultaneous revolts in the South and North, it cannot easily reassert its supremacy over the remaining provinces.

Brazil could well have split apart in these years.

It did not for three reasons.

First, the military had been reorganized as an instrument of national unity under the leadership of Luis Alves de Lima e Silva, who was ennobled as the Duke of Caxias (Duque de Caxias) and who will later be proclaimed Patron of the Brazilian Army.

Second, the specter of slave revolt and social disintegration had become all too real.

And third, the "vision of Brazil as a union of autonomous pátrias" in Roderick J. Barman's phrase, had been replaced by the vision of Brazil as a nation-state.

Rather than risk their fortunes and lives, the elites, longing for a focus of loyalty, identity, and authority, rally around the boy-emperor, who ascends the throne on July 18, 1841, at age fifteen instead of the constitutionally specified age of eighteen.

Thus, the second empire is born in the hope that it will be an instrument of national unity, peace, and prosperity.

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